Photo taken of ball mark

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Paris - Picture this: Angered by a line call, a tennis player pulls out his
phone and uses it to snap a photo of the mark left in the clay by the
ball.

Maybe the sort of thing that would happen at a public court,
if two pals got into a tiff during a match and one wanted evidence for
later - except in this case, it was a professional who did it at the
French Open.

Sergiy Stakhovsky of Ukraine set down his racket and
briefly became an amateur photographer in his 6-1, 6-4, 6-3 loss to
seventh-seeded Richard Gasquet of France in the first round of the Grand
Slam tournament Monday.

"I'm now expecting a fine, actually, so I'm going to go and fight," Stakhovsky said.

"I
believe it was a bad call, it was a bad judgment. After all, we are
playing on clay, where you should be clearly able to read the mark," he
added, "and unfortunately, not all of our referees are able to do so."

During
the first set on Court Suzanne Lenglen, the 101st-ranked Stakhovsky hit
a shot that landed right along a line. The ball was ruled out, but
Stakhovsky was sure it was in.

He argued with the chair umpire,
Carlos Ramos, who wouldn't change the decision. So Stakhovsky decided to
gather proof for his case, getting his phone and walking over to where
the spot in question was, then leaning over to get a close-up of the red
clay.

"It was just spontaneous. It's never thought through," he
said. "When you see it, you get frustrated, because you saw the ball is
nowhere being out and the frustrations comes in."

Asked by a reporter to show the photo, Stakhovsky obliged, grabbing his phone from a pocket.

"Everybody wants to see it," he said with a chuckle.

Stakhovsky
said it wasn't even the first time he'd done this: He pulled a similar
stunt during the clay court tournament at Munich last month.

"Munich
was a very close call which could go both ways, so I didn't really
bother going to the supervisor and asking. But this one is in a Grand
Slam, so first of all, the fine is actually there, possibly, (and) I
don't want to get it. So I'll try to explain myself. I don't know if
it's going to work."

At a clay event in Rome this month, another
pro, Viktor Troicki of Serbia, ushered a TV cameraman out onto the court
to get video evidence of a ball mark he was sure showed a call was
incorrect.

"I saw that," Stakhovsky said, then offered a critique
of the camerawork on that occasion, saying the angle was all wrong:
"They came from the side, so you couldn't see the mark."

Gasquet, for his part, agreed the call on Monday was quite close and said he wasn't bothered a bit by Stakhovsky's antics.

"It's
funny. It's not a problem," Gasquet said. "He's a funny guy. I think
he's one of the funniest guys in the draw. For sure, it's not usual to
see that, but I can understand he's frustrated."

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